Ankersmit, Frank,
Metaphor and Paradox in Tocqueville's Analysis of Democracy, in The
Question of Style in Philosophy and the Arts 157-177 (Caroline van Eck,
James McAllister, and Renie van de Vall, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1995).

Alulis, Joseph Edward, The Price
of Freedom: Tocqueville, the Framers and the anti-Federalists, 27
Perspectives on Political Science 85-91 (Spring 1998).

Amos, Sigrid Karin, Alexis de Tocqueville and the American national identity: the
reception of De la democratie en Amerique in the United States in the nineteenth
century (Frankfurt am Main and NY: Peter Lang, 1995)(Comparative Studies
Series/Komparatistische Bibliothek; 5). Originally the author's dissertation, Katholisches
Universität, Eichstatt, 1994.

Becker, Carl Lotus, On democracy: Why
De Tocqueville wrote Democracy in America, in Detachment and the
Writing of History: Essays and Letters of Carl L. Becker (Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 1958).

Beem, Christopher, The Necessity of Politics:
Reclaiming American Public Life (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1999). Includes several chapters on Tocqueville and Democracy in America.

Clark, Thomas, The
American DemocratReads Democracy in America: Cooper and Tocqueville
in the Transatlantic Hall of Mirrors, 52(2) Amerikastudien/American
Studies 187-208 (2007). Compares James Fenimore Cooper's writing in
The American Democrat to Tocqueville's observations in Democracy in
America.

Consolini, Paula Maria, Learning by Doing Justice: Jury Service and
Political Attitudes (Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley,
1992). Examines Tocqueville's assumptions about the nature of the jury.

Dietrich, William Stephen,
Tocqueville and the Primacy of the Democratic Transformation (Dissertation,
University of Pittsburgh, 1984).

Diani,
Marco, Democracy and Its Discontent: Tocqueville and Baudrillard on the
Nature of “America”, in From Virgin Land to Disney World: Nature and Its
Discontents in the USA of Yesterday and Today 53-68 (Bernd Herzogenrath ed.;
Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2001).

Donovan, Virginia Rae, D'Iberville, Chaussegros, de Lery, the Laterrières,
and Tocquevilles: Quèbec through the prism of absolutism, the Enlightenment, and
Romanticism (Dissertation, The Ohio State
University, 2007). From the abstract: "This dissertation evaluates the
perspectives of these writers through a careful analysis of selected major
writings about Quebec. Included are historical documents that were not
originally intended to be literature according to the classic definition of the
term. Yet these documents bear the mark of the conceptual framework in which
they were written, even as does the literature of a given era. This demonstrates
that these historical documents provide us with different views of Quebec which
mirror not only these individuals' life experiences, but which also reflect
their participation in the dominant literary, philosophical or historical
movements in existence at the time that they lived: Absolutism, the
Enlightenment, and Romanticism."

Dworkin, Ronald
William,The Rise of the Imperial Self: American Culture Wars in
Augustian Perspective (Rowman and Littlefield, 1996). Includes "Christianity, Public Opinion, and
Republican Principle in the Imagination of Tocqueville's American" at 29-38
and "Tocqueville's American as an Aristocrat in the City of God" at 121-138.

Dzur, Albert W., Democracy's
"Free School": Tocqueville and Lieber on the Value of the Jury, 38
Political Theory 603 (2010).

Feher, Ferenc, The evergreen Tocqueville: on the occasion of the Hungarian
publication of American democracy (Bundoora, Victoria: School of Politics, La
Trobe University, 1995)(La Trobe Politics Working Paper; 7).

Fields, Emmett B., Another Look at the American Character, 65(1) Soundings
41-56 (1982).

Hochberg, Leonard J., Reconciling History With
Sociology? Strategies of Inquiry in Tocqueville's Democracy in America
and The Old Regime and the French Revolution, 7 Journal of
Classical Sociology 23-54 (2007).

Hunter, Mark, The force of the engine: conflicts of American democracy in the works
ofWalt Whitman and Alexis de Tocqueville (Bachelor's thesis, Harvard University,
1975).

Igarashi, Takeshi, Tokubiru no fukei: Amerika no demokurashi to Amerika ron no
tenkai, 733 Shiso (Iwanami Shoten 134-160 (1985). The Imagery of
Tocqueville: Democracy in America and the development of themes on the United
States.

Janara, Laura Alecto, Democracy Growing
Up: Authority, Autonomy and Passion in Tocqueville's Democracy in
America(Buffalo: State University of New York Press,
2002)(SUNY Series in Political Theory).

Janara, Laura Alecto, Democracy's Family
Values: Alexis de Tocqueville on Anxiety, Fear and Desire, 34(3)
Canadian Journal of Political Science 551-578 (2001).

Jardin, André, Tocqueville et la
décentralisation, in La décentralisation: Sixth colloquium on history
organized by the faculty of letters and human sciences of Aix-en-Provence,
December 1-2, 1961 89-117 (Aix-en-Provence: The Faculty of Letters of the
University, 1961?)

Ketcham, R., Observing North Atlantic Polities, 1672-1840: Sir William Temple,
Voltaire, and Alexis de Tocqueville, in Connecting Cultures: The Netherlands in
Five Centuries of Transatlantic Exchange 209 (1994).

Kramer, Lloyd, Lafayette, Tocqueville and
American National Identity, in Lafayette in Two Worlds 185
(1996).

Kramer, Michael P., Condillac to Michaelis to Tooke: How Noah Webster Invented a
National Language Or, Was Tocqueville Wrong About American English? 14 European
Contributions to American Studies 212-227 (1988).

Lawler, Peter Augustine,
Percy and Tocqueville on American Aristocracy and Democracy, in
Seers and Judges: American Literature as Political Philosophy 101-120
(Christine Dunn Henderson, ed.; Lanham: Lexington, 2002).

Murphy, William, Tocqueville in New York: The
Formulation of the Egalitarian Thesis, 61(1/2) 69-79 (1977).

Naegele, Kaspar D., From De Tocqueville to Myrdal: a research memorandum on selected
studies of American values (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University, 1949)(Harvard University.
Laboratory of Social Relations. Comparative Study of Values. Working papers, 1).

Perrin, Andrew J., American
Democracy: From Tocqueville to Town Halls To Twitter (Polity, 2014).

Perry, Lewis, Boats against the current : American culture between revolution and
modernity, 1820-1860 (NY: Oxford University Press, 1993). Includes Tocqueville:
Wilderness and Civilization, at 89-104.

Pierson, George Wilson, Tocqueville's visions of democracy, 51(1) Yale
University Library Gazette 4-17 (July 1976). Lecture written for "the opening of
the Bicentennial exhibition "Images of America After the Revolution: Alexis de
Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont visit the early republic" on Wednesday, 7 April
1976. Preceded by an introduction by Kingman Brewster, Jr."

Probst, George E., Democracy in America: leader's discussion & reading
guide (Chicago, Bloomington: American Foundation for Continuing Education, Indiana
University Audio-Visual Center, 1962). "Accompanies Democracy in America : fourteen
dramatizations of American democratic life based on the classic work by Alexis de
Tocqueville."

Tocqueville and the Frontiers
of Democracy (Richard Boyd and Ewa Attanassow, eds., Cambridge University
Press, 2014). Contents: Ewa Attanassow and Richard Boyd, Introduction:
Tocqueville and the Frontiers of Democracy; Nestor Capdevila, Democracy
and Revolution in Tocqueville: The Frontiers of Democracy; Ran Halévi,
The Frontier Between Aristocracy and Democracy; Ralph Lerner,
Tocqueville's Burke, or Democracy as History; Alan Kaham, Tocqueville and
Religion: Beyond the Frontier of Christendom; Cheryl B. Welch,
Deliberating Democratization With Tocqueville: The Case of East Asia; Joshua
Mitchell, Tocquevillean Thoughts on Higher Education in the Middle East;
Susan McWilliams, Tocqueville and the Unsettled Global Village; Ewa
Attassanow, Nationahood--Democracy's Final Frontier?; Céline Spector,
Commerce, Glory, and Empire: Montesquieu's Legacy; David Clinton, The
Surprising M. Tocqueville: Necessity, Foreign Policy, and Civic Virtue;
Jennifer Pitts, Democracy and Domination: Empire, Slavery, and Democratic
Corruption in Tocqueville's Thought; Richard Boyd, Tocqueville and the
Napoleonic Legend; Robert Pippin, Tocqueville, the Problem of Equality,
and John Ford's "Stagecoach,"; Paul Berman, The Poetry of Democracy;
Robert T. Gannett, Jr., Tocqueville and the Local Frontiers of Democracy;
Robert Boyd, Epilogue: New Frontiers, Old Dilemmas.

Tocqueville's America (Toronto: Indiana University Audio-Visual Center for the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1972). One videocassette. Compares Tocqueville's
predictions of the development of American society with today.